Earlier this week, Joe Linton noticed that marking were appearing on mid-town streets to mark the spot where Sharrows would be placed. Linton is one of the harshest critics of the city's attempts to jump off the Bike Plan to add Sharrows to city streets to reach the Mayor's stated promise of 40 miles of bike projects every year for the next five.
Linton's fellow Los Angeles Bicycle Advisory Committee Member Jonathan Weiss spotted Sharrows markings (the x and arrow designating where a Sharrow should go) along Motor Avenue on the Westside. The quick takeaway is that LADOT is serious about getting these 20 miles of new Sharrowed streets on the ground as quickly as possible.
We should note that the same section of Motor Avenue that is going to receive the Sharrows is due to receive bike lanes in the Bike Plan that was passed in March of this year. There is no timeline on when the Sharrows will be converted to Bike Lanes. But in the meantime, the city that took almost eight years to implement its first Sharrows now seems to be embracing them with gusto.